Business & Tech

Unpaid Meals Tax Led to Restaurant Seizure

Il Faro owes $142,000 in unpaid taxes and penalties, mainly for charging a meals tax but not sending that money to the state.

A seized Medford Square restaurant charged patrons a meals tax but didn't pay what they collected to the state, a Department of Revenue Spokesman said Thursday.

Il Faro, an Italian eatery located at 21 Main St., was seized by the Department of Revenue last week because it owes the state a total of $142,784.20 in taxes and penalty fees, department spokesman Bob Bliss said. Nearly all of the back taxes, which date back to 2006, stemmed from the meals tax, he said.

"Patrons paid the meals tax, but the restaurant didn’t forward that to DOR," Bliss said.

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Seizing a business is the last thing the Department of Revenue will do in their efforts to collect unpaid taxes, Bliss said.

"You only get to this point when everything else DOR tries to collect has failed," he said. "This is sort of the last stop."

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The restaurant had an orange sign on its door Tuesday, reading "SEIZED." Several florescent signs remained lit inside the windows of the Italian eatery Tuesday afternoon.

If Giuseppe Longo, the owner of the restaurant, can come up with a reasonable down payment and payment plan going forward, the business could be reopened, Bliss said.

"We always hope that’s the case, because it’s a lot easier for us," Bliss said. "We get the money, the business opens back up and the jobs don’t get lost."

The business, not the building, was seized. If a payment plan isn't agreed upon, the property of the restaurant will go to auction in about 4 to 6 weeks, Bliss said.

A call to the restaurant Tuesday was unanswered.

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